This week in Mormon Land: Let this (coffee) cup pass, a surprising stake leader, and the sounds of music

(Illustration by Christopher Cherrington | The Salt Lake Tribune) Research shows that about 40 percent of millennial and Generation X members, including temple-recommend-carrying ones, had downed a cup of coffee in the previous six months — despite the Word of Wisdom’s long-standing prohibition against it.

The Mormon Land newsletter is a weekly highlight reel of developments in and about The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, whether heralded in headlines, preached from the pulpit or buzzed about on the back benches. Want this newsletter in your inbox? Subscribe here.

Preventing abuse through training

(Photo courtesy of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints) The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has launched an online training course for all adults who interact with children and youths in their church assignments.

The church is requiring all those who work with the faith’s children or youths to complete a 30-minute online training course on how to prevent abuse.

“The training is designed to increase awareness, highlight policies and identify best practices for supervising and interacting with children and youth,” a news release states. “It also helps leaders know how to prevent and respond to abuse.”

The “creation and evaluation of the training,” it noted, was done in consultation with “leaders and specialists from child protection organizations, family therapists and other professionals.”

The prevalence of coffee drinking among young Latter-day Saints surprised researcher Jana Riess. Her groundbreaking Next Mormons Survey showed that about 40 percent of millennial and Generation X members, including temple-recommend-carrying ones, had downed a cup of coffee in the previous six months — despite the Word of Wisdom’s long-standing prohibition against it. Starbucks even plans to open its first stand-alone store in Provo, right in front of the church’s Brigham Young University.

Perhaps those trends help explain the church’s recent reinforcement of the policy and why that advisory came out in the New Era, the faith’s youth magazine.

“The word coffee isn’t always in the name of coffee drinks,” the article states. “So, before you try what you think is just some new milkshake flavor, here are a couple of rules of thumb: (1) If you’re in a coffee shop (or any other shop that’s well-known for its coffee), the drink you’re ordering probably has coffee in it, so either never buy drinks at coffee shops or always ask if there’s coffee in it. (2) Drinks with names that include café or caffé, mocha, latte, espresso, or anything ending in -ccino are coffee and are against the Word of Wisdom.”

In short, Latter-day Saints, let this cup pass.

The pronouncement also denounced vaping, green tea and iced tea. It warned against taking opioids and marijuana unless done so “under the care of a competent physician, and then used only as prescribed.”

The church has stated it “supports medicinal use of marijuana so long as proper controls and safeguards are in place.”

Stakes are high in Lima

(Photo courtesy of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints) Rendering of the Lima Peru Los Olivos Temple.

Salt Lake City, Orem, Ogden and — Lima?

Yes, the Peruvian capital ranks right up there with those Utah population centers, along with Phoenix and Los Angeles, for the number of Latter-day Saint stakes.

The church recently organized a new stake in Lima, the fifth this year alone, independent demographer Matt Martinich reports at ldschurchgrowth.blogspot.com.

But there may be more at play than meets the ear and eye when Elder Price joyously sings about getting his own planet and Elder Cunningham lovingly lies his way to convert after convert in the jungles of Uganda. In fact, Mormonism’s ties to musical theater — both from within the faith and without — run deep.

How to keep LGBTQ members in the fold

(Rick Egan | Tribune file photo) In this June 12, 2018, file photo, Ed Smart talks to the media at the Utah State Prison in Draper, Utah, after a parole hearing for Wanda Barzee. The father of Utah kidnapping survivor Elizabeth Smart has come out as gay, saying his decision brings challenges but also "huge relief." Ed Smart said in a letter explaining his decision that he no longer feels comfortable being a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, which opposes same-sex relationships.

In his letter coming out as gay, Ed Smart, father of kidnapping survivor Elizabeth Smart and a nationally recognized advocate for child safety, lamented that the church was no longer a place of “solace.”

So, what could the faith and the faithful do to better embrace LGBTQ members? The following ideas, among others, emerged:

• “Stop describing us as ‘suffering’ from ‘same-gender attraction,’” Burke added, “especially when the vast majority of LGBTQ saints don’t use those identifiers.”

• “Find ways to use LGBTQ members’ time and talents, rather than focusing on what’s ‘wrong with them,’" he advised, “or on how they must live lives of celibacy, with no hope of an eternal family.”

• “Quit trying to explain how LGBTQ attractions and identity will be fixed in the hereafter or by marrying a person of the opposite sex,” said Lisa Tensmeyer Hansen, clinical director at Flourish Therapy in Provo.

Of course, the biggest barrier remains the church’s opposition to same-sex relationships and marriage.

“At the heart of any inhospitality, said Kendall Wilcox, co-founder of the gay-friendly grassroots group Mormons Building Bridges, are the “core doctrines around chastity, marriage and family that many believe are eternal and unchangeable.”

Without revising, or at least expanding, those beliefs, Wilcox told The Tribune, the best tack church leaders can take is to “listen to us and try to empathize with us and then let that empathy unsettle their settled assumptions about the doctrine.”

Temple update

(Photo courtesy of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints) Elder Marcos A. Aidukaitis of the Seventy presides at the Belém Brazil Temple groundbreaking on Saturday, Aug. 17, 2019. The temple rendering is displayed at the right.

Work is underway on Brazil’s latest temple after a groundbreaking ceremony Saturday in Belém.

“May the members of the church be inspired to find solutions to the problems and challenges that arise,” general authority Seventy Marcos A. Aidukaitis, a native Brazilian, prayed in dedicating the site. “May the neighbors feel the spirit of the work and may [they] be happy as they pass by, and may the temple contribute to the beautification of this beautiful city.”

Brazil, home to nearly 1.4 million Latter-day Saints, the most of any country after the U.S. and Mexico, has seven operating temples and plans for four more.

A new African HQ

(Image courtesy of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints) This graphic shows the country divisions for African areas.

When the new area — home to more than 100,000 members — comes on line a year from now, a news release said, it will oversee church operations in Burundi, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Republic of the Congo, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Djibouti, Eritrea, Equatorial Guinea, Ethiopia, Gabon, Kenya, Rwanda, Somalia, South Sudan, Tanzania, Uganda, Seychelles and São Tomé and Príncipe.

Ask for it by name

A year after President Russell M. Nelson launched his push to erase “Mormon” as a nickname for the church and its members, the results among the wider populace have been, in a word, underwhelming.

Code talkers

The Honor Code evolution — or is it a revolution? — continues at the church’s premier university.

In the latest change, BYU students will be told what misconduct they are accused of before they go in for questioning.

“This is a pretty big improvement,” Addison Jenkins, a former student, told The Tribune. “... BYU owes a huge debt of gratitude to the students who have organized and brought this to the community’s attention and kept up the dialogue and pressure to make sure things changed.”

A federal judge is giving the Colorado woman, who alleges that a former president of the Missionary Training Center raped her 35 years ago at the Provo campus, six more weeks to find lawyers to represent her in the case.

“There aren’t that many firms that specialize in this kind of a case,” Denson told the judge, “so I have to be a little bit careful in who I ask to represent me.”

Denson alleges Joseph L. Bishop, who now lives in the Phoenix area, of raping her in 1984 at the faith’s flagship MTC when he was president there.

Quote of the week

(Photo courtesy of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints) Joy D. Jones, Primary general president, talks with Primary children in Washington, D.C., Sunday, June 4, 2017.

“We take Jesus Christ’s teachings about children and youth very seriously. He welcomed them into his presence and gave stern warnings against abusing, bullying or hurting them in any way. … His deep concern for children and youth must continue to be our deep concern.”